Title of sound recording: Oral History Interview with Angus Boaz
Thompson Sr., October 21, 2003. Interview U-0017. Southern Oral History
Program Collection (#4007)

Title of series: Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South
Since the 1960s. Southern Oral History Program Collection (U-0017)

Author: Malinda Maynor

Title of transcript: Oral History Interview with Angus Boaz Thompson
Sr., October 21, 2003. Interview U-0017. Southern Oral History Program
Collection (#4007)

Title of series: Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South
Since the 1960s. Southern Oral History Program Collection (U-0017)

Author: Angus Boaz Thompson Sr.

Description: 173 Mb

Description: 30 p.

Note:
Interview conducted on October 21, 2003, by Malinda
Maynor; recorded in Lumberton, North Carolina.

Note:
Transcribed by Sharon Caughill.

Note:
Forms part of: Southern Oral History Program Collection
(#4007): Series U. The Long Civil Rights Movement: The South Since the
1960s, Manuscripts Department, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.

Note:
Original transcript on deposit at the Southern
Historical Collection, The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.

Editorial practicesAn audio file with the interview complements this electronic edition.The text has been encoded using the recommendations for Level 4 of the TEI in
Libraries Guidelines.Original grammar and spelling have been preserved. All quotation marks, em dashes and ampersand have been transcribed as entity
references.All double right and left quotation marks are encoded as "All em dashes are encoded as —

[TAPE 1, SIDE A]

. . . black. My daddy was quite interested in education. He used to run
the school board, and initiated building the school, the high school out
here. I was in the first graduating class out there.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

At Rosenwald?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

No, no, no.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Oh.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Remember I told you I finished twice.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right, right, right. Okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

This was the first time. At the time I knew he had told us, well there
was two of his children in the class, but he told us that we weren't
going to get any credit. That's simply because the school has a criteria
set for a high school, really, and that first year, the math, the
science, it didn't come up to par. He knew that. It wasn't up to par.
But he said, if I move you all well, it was a flop. The school wouldn't
be finished. And the people moved out of there, they wouldn't stay.
There was just a few of us in there. So we stayed. I was valedictorian
of the class out here. We had to come back, and had to go down here to
Fairmont to Rosenwald the next year, I think it was maybe three months,
to get a certified diploma. That's why I said I had to graduate twice.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's amazing.

Page 2

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

That's what happened there. Work-year student in 1940. A work-year
student, you worked and went to school.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. We call them work-study students now.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

That's a new name now.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Occupational experience. Do you want to include your army—[tape cuts
off]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

This is tape 10.21.03-AT. The interviewee is Mr. Angus Thompson Sr.
We're at his house in Lumberton, North Carolina. The interviewer is
Malinda Maynor. So, Mr. Thompson, maybe you could start by telling us
about your father and telling us about his starting the NAACP chapter in
Robeson County, kind of that time period, what you were doing then, some
of the things that were going on here.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Well, the NAACP chapter was initiated here in Robeson County by my
father during the time that I was overseas. I was overseas from 1942 to
1945 when I came home. My father was very much interested in civil
rights as well as education. He would step out in front as a leader in
civil rights and when he could even in education. My father, I don't
think he even ever finished high school, but he was very intellectual
and was considered a leader in the county, church, and community
activities.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What kind of work did he do?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Brick mason and farm. Yes, after he quit the farm he became a brick
mason and laid brick. In fact, he learned to lay brick when he was
chairman of the school board [actually, the school committee] out at
Back Swamp and was building that school. A good friend of his named
Professor Isley who was a regular old brick mason. At that time

Page 3

he learned to lay brick right out there. He was also
chairman of that school board, and that's why he had Professor Isley out
there as a construction builder.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So before you went to the war where were you attending school?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

I attended school at Back Swamp. I was a member of the first class that
you might call high school class. At that time our classes, high school,
was from eighth grade to eleventh. We didn't have twelfth grade at that
time. That was where I was living, out there, and that's where I
finished. Because of a lack of accreditation for that school for the
first year—the science department wasn't up. The library department
wasn't up where we could get some credit, so I had to spend three months
at Rosenwald in Fairmont the next year to get my certified diploma.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Your actual high school diploma.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

A high school diploma. So, now, after that, I finished school right here
in 1937. That was at Back Swamp. In 1938 I went back three months to
Rosenwald and got a certified diploma. After that I worked in tobacco in
1939, tobacco markets, Durham, and on tobacco markets here. In 1940 I'd
saved up enough money to enter Hampton Institute. That's when I entered
Hampton on September the 9th, 1940. I was a work-year student. That's
what we were called. On October the 16th, 1940, was when the call for
all men the age of twenty-one to go to their local board for registering
for the war. That was in October of 1940. Nineteen hundred and
forty-one, my second year in school, then is when they called me to go
into the service. Of course, I got a deferment twice. The third time
they didn't grant me a deferment. They told me that I'd have to report
to my local board for service, which I did. So in 1941 I left school in
October, on October the

Page 4

16th, came home to my local
board and was inducted into the service on November the 19th. From that
date I was discharged from the service October, 1945.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay. And you returned home then?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Returned home. Went back to school at Hampton in the trade school. When
I first went I went in the Ag department, but after I came back I went
to the trade school and finished trade in tailoring, then came back home
and worked for a few months with another tailor who was already set up
here, then went into the tailor business for myself right here on the
Fairmont Road. That's what it was then. It's Martin Luther King, Jr.
Drive.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Now did you get involved in the NAACP when you came back and started
working?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Not immediately. I was a member, but so far as holding office, no. After
my daddy's passing I became president of the chapter for a couple of
terms.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And when did he pass away?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

My daddy passed in 1973.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Nineteen seventy-three, April 25th. Yes. Really my mother was the one,
which was his wife, trying to hold it up, to keep it going. But one
thing, after the county chapter was organized then all the
municipalities here formed chapters: Fairmont, and Red Springs, St.
Pauls, Maxton, and Rowland, and Lumberton. All of them formed.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

And they formed after your father formed the county chapter?

Page 5

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh yes. There was no kind of chapter here until daddy got a chapter
formed in maybe 43. So we it went that way with all these chapters
operating here until maybe about three, or four, or five years ago. All
the chapters were slowly not doing too much, even Robeson County, so the
national offices advised all the chapters in this county to merge into
one chapter.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And that was just here recently?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes, that was just here recently, four or five years ago. So we did
that, and it's basically that way now, all merged into the Robeson
County chapter.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

And that's the only chapter in the county right now that's active and
got a charter.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How effective was the NAACP did you think in the 1940s and the 1950s?
What kinds of things was the organization doing?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

In the 1950s?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Yeah.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

And the 1940s? The NAACP at that time did a lot of fighting for people
who were accused of certain crimes and things of that nature that the
NAACP felt sure that they wasn't receiving justice and things like that.
Now, NAACP became active in the school integration during the 1950s, but
the NAACP was working from the national level instead of this county
level at that time. We even had Thurgood Marshall who was joint council
for the national NAACP to come here and speak. That was in September in
1952. And why that stands out, that was the year [Hurricane] Hazel came
through in September, 1952, and he was delayed. His flight was delayed
coming in so he was late

Page 6

getting here that night. He
did come here and speak and everything. At that particular time the
NAACP on the national level was fighting hard for integration and had
the suit. It was already initiated to integrate the schools on the basis
that separate but equal was unconstitutional. In 54, that's when the
NAACP was successful in getting the Supreme Court to pass the law that
separate but equal was unconstitutional.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What was your reaction to that ruling?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, well, we were overjoyed. Now, we knew at that time it would be a
slow process because tradition is not an easy thing for anyone to get
out of. Naturally, we knew that to integrate the schools was going to be
tough and slow because we knew that white folks were not ready for that.
They wasn't used to it. I could understand that very well, but that
didn't make it right, so we kept fighting. We kept fighting. What really
set the ball to rolling was whenever the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on
Brown v. Topeka that separate but equal was unconstitutional and the
justice department and the president ordered to integrate the schools in
Arkansas. Now that started the ball rolling. And, of course, out there,
the same as it is here, they resisted. Even the governors wasn't ready,
and the governors represented the people. Naturally, they were going to
try to satisfy the people. At that particular time—I never will forget
it. This was the first one. At that time the governor was Faubus out
there. He was Governor Faubus. Of course all these Southern governors
was against school integration, and they were just reluctant to do it.
These Southern governors, they went against it. They were slow. They
just wouldn't accept it. What they did out here in Arkansas, Faubus—the
justice department told them, "Open the door and let them integrate the
schools." The governors took the initiative to place their state
national

Page 7

guards in the school door to keep them from
going there, keep blacks from going there even after they had been
ordered to do so. That was very easy because after Faubus put the guards
there to keep them out, I know this because General Eisenhower—he was
president at that time. He was General when I was in the service. But he
was the president. He took the same guards out there in Arkansas and
federalized them. He said, "you'll all have to move." Federalized them
there at that school. They was already placed there by the state to keep
blacks out. He federalized them, so "you all make way, clear out," so
the blacks could come in. That's what happened.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Was that happening here in North Carolina?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, no. Not at that time.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What was happening here?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Well, the first thing after that, that was national. That was for
nationally. If it was for Arkansas, it was order for everybody. They
passed an order to start desegregating the schools. The Justice
Department told them to do it. I'm trying to think of the word that they
used, but slowly do it. That was what they was telling them to do. But,
as I said, all of them bucked up. After they were moving slow, then the
Justice Department turned around and kind of give them a time to speed
up the integration. Of course, then it was just that the schools had to
be integrated, but every school system in the South. The boards were
trying their best, and the state, even our state legislature, what they
did, they drew up a plan. They had been ordered to do it, how they were
going to integrate.

And our plan, the State of North Carolina legislature, was named the
Pearsall Plan. Pearsall was a legislator up there. Now, the Pearsall
Plan places in it to still keep

Page 8

their schools
integrated. They started building schools for blacks after they had been
ordered, to build schools in the black communities and white schools in
the white communities. After the Justice Department got onto that they
told them, "How are we going to integrate them?" They said, "You have to
bus them. You have to bus them to integrate them," because if you use
neighborhood schools they wasn't integrated. School in the black and
[unclear] go to it, that's black. School in the white, go to it, it's
white.

They started busing, and that busing was very effective even right here
in Lumberton. They asked for a bond issue to build two high schools, a
high school over here in the south, South Lumberton, which was
predominantly black, and a high school over in Lumberton, North
Lumberton which was predominantly white. Now for the two schools the
bond issue was a million and a half dollars, one and a half million
dollars, and it was stated the half million to build the school in South
Lumberton and a million to build the one in North Lumberton. Well, I was
fighting that myself just hook, line, and sinker.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So this was the early 1960s, right, the bond issue?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes, ma'am. I was fighting it hook, line, and sinker because at that
time I had my oldest child, Mishelle, she was four years ahead of our
second child [unclear] child, academically. She was four years ahead of him. After the
bond issue passed at the second count, it fell through the first time
but it passed the second count, they built two schools here. They build
two, one in South Lumberton, one in North Lumberton. After they did
that, and that was taken to the Justice Department, they found it out,
they ordered this school system, "You won't have but one high school in
Lumberton." So my daughter was a member of the last class that finished
the black high school over here. They had to

Page 9

shut it
down and use it for a junior high. That's what it is today, a junior
high. It was the only junior high in the city, and the white one became
the only senior high school in the city. So regardless of what color you
were, if you were a senior you had to go to the same school. You had to
go to the same junior high.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How successful did you feel like the Justice Department's solution was?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

It was just what we needed. I'll tell you what, if that hadn't happened
today we'd be right at the brink of where we were when we was freed from
slavery. That started, not only in schools, it started integration at
the lunch counters, integration of the buses, integration of motels, and
all of these establishments. They were fighting it, but the Justice
Department was pushing it. That was all over the South. And today, today
it caused one race to realize that there're smart people in all races.
It caused them to realize that blacks as well as whites have to have an
opportunity to advance, progress just as they have. Through the
generations it has caused even this younger generation to become less—
well, basically they're color blind now. The children, the white
children of today and the black children or any minorities, Indians and
all. Naturally now I must say this, there's discrimination and
segregation amongst these races themselves to a certain degree. You're
going to find that, but today the races intermingle, they co-mingle.
What has brought it about is just this initiation of the school
desegregation plan.

It's true right now that we have a lot of whites. We also have a lot of
blacks. But still, we got some blacks, of course most of them are by
gone by now, they don't like mixing the races. And whites, they don't
like it. But we're at a place where we can't help ourselves because
after our children reach a certain age now, we lose control over them.

Page 10

They go for themselves, and that's the way they
should be going. You can't wait until they're forty or fifty years and
then turn them loose. It's just been a blessing.

You know, I've seen things take place that if they'd been during my time
I'd of been hanging in a tree. Hanging in a tree. I've seen a time in
this area a smart black man couldn't show it but so much. He just had to
shut up. If you did, they'd call you smart, and maybe flog you to death.
I give God the credit for all of this, but it just brought the races
closer together.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What did you think about what Indians were doing at that time in the
late 50s and early 60s, say the KKK thing, how did you react to that?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, that was marvelous. That was marvelous. Now, at one time, I want to
say this about the Indians. The black population was heavier than the
Indian population. Most Indians, they nest. They live everywhere, but
their nest was in the Pembroke area. Of course, the whites was against
them just like they were against blacks, but they accepted the Indians,
as I saw it, a degree above the blacks. It was like this, "Well, if
we're going to have to have one to mingle with," they would prefer the
Indians. You may see a little of that now. Life is just real. That's
just the way it is.

Again, we all had a lot of prejudice. The black race was filled with
prejudice, too. We've got that. That's human nature. But, yet, if we're
going to call ourselves Christians and things we must struggle to get
beyond some of that stuff. In order for us to be successful and have a
successful society we must work together.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Did you feel that there were Indians that didn't want to work with
blacks at that time?

Page 11

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

To start with they partnered with the blacks. I can remember clearly
that's the way we had to vote. The blacks and the Indians was getting
together when it came to elections to vote. We have a little of that
now, but the population of the Indians is the greatest population out of
the three races now. They're much more independent now than they were
back then.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Was it more equal back then, the population, or who was dominating?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

The white were dominating, and our population was greater than the
Indian population, but now the Indian population is greater than the
black or the white. Of course, back in that time I could see that
coming, myself. I give the good Lord the credit because I even spoke to
one of the Indian leaders that lived not far here from me. When we was
getting ready for elections, he came over here and sat down on the porch
and we talked. I said, "Well, Worth," that was his name, Worth Hunt. I
said, "Now, it's true that we've got to work together to have any say-so
in this county with these white folks." I said, "Because we're out
numbered." We all knew that. We knew that. I said, "But you know what,"
I told him, I said, "Now it looks to me like the Indian population was
just beginning to grow." I said, "It looks to me like in five or ten
years the Indian race looks like it's fixing to double their
population." And he admitted it. He said, "Since you said that, that's
what we plan to do." I said, "You're planning to take this county back
over." Jokingly I said that, but I knew that the Indians felt like the
land had been taken from them, and if I'd been in their shoes if there
was any way to take it back, take it back. But I'm caught in the middle.
I'm caught in the middle right here.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right, absolutely.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Being a black man.

Page 12

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How did that change or shape your strategy for dealing with the problem?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Well, to tell you the truth it didn't. It has changed it a little. Right
now I can tell you this, where we used to partner with the Indians there
are some cases now that we might even partner with the whites, but back
then we couldn't partner with the whites. They didn't want us. No way.

I can remember very clearly the first time a white ever came to me. It
was a white running for county commissioners. This commissioner came to
me asking me about how I felt about a run off. And I told this
commissioner, I said, "Well, you know it's something to know that you've
come to me." I said, "Never before have the white folks eyes been open
enough to see that they might need black support." We were open to them
then, but they didn't care nothing about our vote. But anyway I told
this commissioner, I said, "I just had a thought." I asked him what the
commission was doing, asking me—I didn't put it that way, but I knew
what they was asking me—did I think I could help them get enough support
to get in?

MALINDA MAYNOR:

In the run off.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah. From the blacks. And I just flat told him, "I don't know. I hadn't
even thought of it." But I did tell him, "This is something you should
have been looking at in years past." It's made racists see themselves,
all of us. It's made racists see themselves. I really think, well, I
hate to say it like this because in every race we've got some who we
call ourselves followers of Christ. Always we follow Christ. We know His
word, but yet we fail to do it. I think it's caused all of us to look at
our Christian life. I know that it has been flawed beyond measure.
There's still flaws in them. There's still some flaws in them.

Page 13

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Maybe we could talk a little bit then about after the Justice Department
came in and said there had to be only one high school, the City of
Lumberton tried another tactic.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, yes.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Right, to keep the schools segregated. Let's talk about that.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Now, after the city built these two schools, two black high schools and
had to shut them down. Then the City of Lumberton's next tactic was
they'd keep them from heavily mixing. Blacks had never, never in their
life, paid one cent to come to the city high schools and never been
asked to if you lived out in the county. Whites had always paid, if you
lived in the county to come to the city schools. But after it was forced
to integrate the school, the city used the tactics, "We're going to
charge the black now if they don't live in the city. We're going to
charge them to come to school. Thirty-five dollars a head. We're going
to charge them."

They knew that would eliminate a whole lot of blacks because they didn't
have the money. And they were right. They were exactly right. So they
put that fee on. They had a right to put it on if they wanted to. They
had been charging the white, but we knew the reason they were doing it,
to keep you out.

There were some parents, black parents had five, six, seven, eight, nine
children in school, and they couldn't pay thirty-five dollars a head.
The majority of the blacks over in the South Lumberton area, the city
limits at that time started up at McMillan Funeral Home. Well, the city
school board had already bought property out here where the junior high
is now, and had the city board to extend the city limits out there so
they could build a school and have the property. Our city council did
that. They actually did that, but they

Page 14

didn't
include anything but just the highway. The residential and east side
between McMillan's Funeral Home and the new high school was in the
county. Nothing but the highway [unclear] road.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And who lived in those houses?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Blacks. Nothing but blacks on both sides. It's still that way now. So
these people came. They couldn't pay thirty-five dollars a head. They
came to me and asked me what they could do. Well, at that time my
daughter had finished high school. I just had a son, and he was just
entering high school. Some of these parents had five, six, seven, eight
children. My response was well, "There's only one way in the world that
we might be able to get in here, and that is through legal counsel. We
cannot use any counsel here Lumberton," because it was nothing but
white.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

So you couldn't hire any lawyers because they were all white?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

You could hire them, but it wouldn't make a difference. They asked me if
I knew anybody that might help.

[END OF TAPE 1, SIDE A]

[TAPE 1, SIDE B]

[START OF TAPE 1, SIDE B]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Now go ahead for us. Julius Chambers.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Julius had just sued UNC so he could go to school there. So I contacted
Julius, and he agreed to come and look our situation over and help us.
So we were meeting at McMillan Funeral Home. He came down twice to talk
to us and look the situation over. The second time he left and went back
he called me. He said, "Angus,

Page 15

I've been in
communication with your black city councilman. I've been in
communication with your school board superintendent, Dr. Carroll."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Is it Gale, G-A-L-E?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Carroll, C-A-R-R-O-L-L.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I'm sorry, okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

He said, "Neither one of them want to compromise. In fact, the
superintendent told me that he wasn't interested in meeting with our
group over there. Nothing he can do for them." He said, "The city
councilman said there were two different bodies. The school board was
independent. The city council was independent of the school board." He
said, "Well, they ought to know that I know better than that. All city
councils work together with the school board on certain issues." He
said, "In the first place the school board didn't zigzag that line out
there like it did to build that school." He said, "The city council had
to put it out there. They did it for the school board." He said, "That
councilman insulted my intelligence." He said, "He really made me hot,
so I'm going to tell you what you do." He said, "You get your group
together down there." He said, "When they did that they broke a statute
of the state of North Carolina." He told me what that statute was. At
that time if you extend the city limit you had to take into
consideration all the [unclear] of the residents, and they did not, not one. He said, "We've got
to put heat to the seat, sue the school board and the city council." So
he came down the third time. He said, "Be ready to show me what you want
in the school district." That's the way he was going to approach it and
soon.

So he came down the third time. When he was getting ready to go, as I've
said we always met at McMillan Funeral Home, our black city councilman
was in the rear. I

Page 16

didn't know he was in there, but
when he heard Chambers make his plan of what he was going to do, he
immediately jumped up and said, "No, don't sue. We can help you. I can
help you."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

The city councilman jumped up and said that?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes. So I said, "I didn't know you was back there. You could have been
helping us a long time ago and saved us a little money to put in our
pockets." Julius said, "Angus, it's whatever you all want to do." I
said, "We're ready to go and show you where you're wrong." I said, "This
councilman didn't ask for to go along with us." And Julius asked me, and
I said, "Sure it's all right. All we want is him to go along." So he
did, he came right along with us and joked the whole while we was out
there.

So after we began to show him what we was going to do, I never will
forget, we got down to McCollum Street, and when we got to McCollum
Street the next street over was Starlite Drive. That's where the Indians
lived on Starlite Drive. Nothing but blacks living on McCollum Street.
So I suggested, I said, "Let's go down half way between Starlite Drive
and McCollum Street out to Fairmont Road." That's what it was at that
time. It's Martin Luther King now. This councilman says, "No, lets go to
Starlite Drive." At that time I said, "Look, I have not talked to those
people on Starlite Drive," which I hadn't. I said, "I don't even know
what they want." I said, "They're Indians." I said, "I haven't talked
with them. They might throw a monkey wrench in it." Julius said, "That's
all right. Whatever you want." So we came on with the line coming half
way between the two streets and got to Fairmont road, and then we had
make a decision, "Where are we going now?" This

Page 17

councilman said, "Well now, we'll just go straight on across here to
Allen Street." That's kind of a left horizontal.

Well, now I'm living, my residence is sitting now on the other side of
Starlite Drive right here where it is now. My son, he's in school, and I
want him in school. This councilman said, "Why don't you pay the
thirty-five dollars?" I said, "Yes, sir. I could pay you thirty-five
dollars to get my son in school, but when we get through drawing this
line I can just see the city council and the school board ain't going to
let nobody just beyond this school district line come in there."
Chambers said, "You're right." He said, "What do you want me to do?" So
I just suggested, I said, "In order that my son may continue go right
down the highway south, down to the south line, include my residence and
then come back up, then we'll go across the other streets." He drew it
on a piece of paper and wrote in there to include Angus Thompson's
residence. It's in there that way by name now if they didn't throw it
away.

Then we came on back to the funeral home. This councilman said, "Now, I
could take this and get it through for you all." And Chambers said,
"What do you want to about it, Angus." I said, "He can do anything. It
don't make no difference as long as it's done." We just handed it over
to him. He took it and went to the school board, and it was okayed. It
was okayed just as beautiful as ever. [Laughter.]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

They're like, "Sure."

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah. Yeah. They could have done it all the time. Then they began to
have problems. The whites began to have a problem. Right here Clyburne
Pines, Barker Ten Mile, all of those schools. They were out of the city
limits in no school district, so they

Page 18

started
crying about how could they get their children in the city limits? And
the superintendent told them, "Do like South Lumberton. Get your
petition together to get them in." I listened to that, and I said, "He
wouldn't tell us nothing, but he's telling them now how to get in."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Now is that Mr. Carroll?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah, that was Carroll.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

You were telling me last time about a meeting that you were at Carroll
Middle School, is this that same time period?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah, this is the same thing.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Late 1970s?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes. Now, I had a cousin. She was teaching over to Carroll Middle
School. She came in one evening, and called me, "Angus," she said, "they
had a meeting over here at Clyburne Pines. These white folks had a
meeting in the school. They're wanting to get their children in the city
school." Lawyer Lee, he was school board, and he agreed. Lawyer Lee,
really, I don't even think he knew what was going on.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Lloyd Lee?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Lawyer. L-A-W-Y-E-R.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

He was the speaker, and he was telling all these people how hard the
school board had worked to get South Lumberton in. I said, "He didn't
know no better." She said, "But they'll have another meeting, and this
time for the high school." She said, "I'll let you know when they're
going to have it."

Page 19

So they did. They had another
meeting. Me and my wife, Angus was just out of law school, 1977, he was
with us, but he won't say nothing now. At this meeting they were crying
about what they could do to get their children in the city schools. It
was announced, "Anybody that had anything to say," and that auditorium
filled up, "feel free." All you had to do was go up to the podium and
tell them. I didn't even move until everybody finished. It wasn't
nothing but white folks, the ones that was complaining then. Lee had
told them how hard they worked to get South Lumberton in and all that
kind of stuff.

Now at that time my pastor happened—he was on the school board. He was
sitting on the stage. All the school board was sitting on the stage. My
pastor was on there. So, after they all finished I got up and went down
to the podium, all the way down. Told them who I was, "Angus
[Thompson.]" I said, "I want to set the record straight. I want to know
how South Lumberton got into the school district." And I told them what
we had went through, that we had gotten Julius Chambers out of
Charlotte, and he threatened to sue. I said, "After we showed him what
we wanted in the school line and he drew it up," I said, "our black city
councilman was with us. He told us that he could get this thing agreed
to and incorporated." I said, "So, we let him do it. That's how we got
in here, not through them working for us. It was through a fight." And
you could hear a rat jump on [unclear]. And when we came out— Lillian, what was the name of that
woman's organization?

LILLIAN THOMPSON:

I don't remember.

Page 20

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Boy, they come at me. I knew those white folks didn't know what was
going on. So I told them, I said, "Yeah, that's how we got in here." And
I showed them how these children were growing up being misled.

LILLIAN THOMPSON:

Lillian: And paid a lawyer to come in.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah, we had to fight to get in there.

LILLIAN THOMPSON:

We had to [unclear].

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes, Lordy. That's how we got in here. Anyway, the president, he came to
me that night. She left here. They got on her so bad that she left this
place. I don't even know what happened to the organization because she
was getting a write up in the paper and all that stuff. But even at
that, later on when it came out in the paper, it came out through the
news media that the black city councilman fought for us to get in the
school district. He didn't do nothing to keep the suit [unclear], but draw it up.

But, I can understand those things. They didn't know. That school board
lawyer said, "Angus, I didn't know all of that." I said, "I know you
didn't, and you didn't try to find out either." That's just what I told
him. He didn't know it, but he was with them. He was the lawyer. He was
white. He could have found out, but there was nobody caring about us.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How did you get the money to pay Julius Chambers?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Out of our pockets.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

How did you raise it?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Out of our pockets. In fact, I told them. At that time I knew all we
needed to do is take care of his expenses from Charlotte. He wasn't
coming to be charging us. I

Page 21

think the first time he
came down it was about thirty-five dollars. That was all we gave him.
Thirty-five dollars, that was big money then. [Laughter.]

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

But he loved it. That was the point of it. NAACP was paying him. Of
course the NAACP has never been a money maker. You don't make nothing
too much. That's like my son. As soon as he came out they took him there
and he was made state NAACP lawyer. All that stuff worked well.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Were there members of the black community who were not part of the NAACP
and who resisted what you were doing, or disagreed with it?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

No, no, no, no, no.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

No.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Well, at the time you know I hate to tell you, but at that time most of
the blacks—the whites had picked out a leader for the blacks. The white
people had picked out a black leader for the blacks. When I say the
white, even if we elected them, especially at that time, blacks were not
thinking for themselves like they think now. The status quo was this. If
you had some education or not, they were looking for somebody to follow.
Not thinking for themselves, what did they know about laws and all that
stuff? None of them had been exposed to that stuff. So we had a black
leader.

Personally, I didn't agree with everything that these black leaders said
because our black leaders [unclear]. They'd been to me and said, "Now, Angus, you come on and help
push this bond issue. Your wife's teaching, and she's got to have a job"
and all this. All that kind of stuff. That was the attitude and the way
they felt. Go along with these white folks so we could get the little
cheese. I don't even want this to go in there, but I think

Page 22

our black leader was getting the money put in his pocket. I
don't know that. Anyway, I told them, I said, "Well, I'll do anything.
I'll run like a rabbit before I send my people down the streets. [SOUND
OF TELEPHONE RINGING IN THE BACKGROUND.]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Let me just cut this off. [TAPE IS TURNED OFF AND THEN BACK ON.]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Okay, go ahead.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

The mass of the black people at that time, they were looking for a
leader, and we had black leaders. But I'm going to tell you today,
that's about faded out. Mass of the black people, you could give them a
dollar, two dollars, and they'd vote for anybody you said. They knew
nothing about who's qualified or elections. They didn't know anybody who
was on the ticket, and rightfully so. They didn't know about stuff like
that. I used to ask them a whole lot. When I'd be in meetings they'd
come and say, "Well who are the white leaders in here? You talking about
the Black leaders? Who you all got leading you?" That was natural,
somewhat comprehensive.

Integration has brought about now where the mass of the blacks think for
themselves. And that's why they think for themselves now. It's
integration. I was out there by myself fighting.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Is that what it felt like?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, yes, Lord. Oh yes. You take my wife right here. She's a member of a
lot of civic clubs, sororities, but I'll never forget. We integrated—and
this was another thing I saw.

Page 23

We didn't have no
city pools. There were white pools. They were in the white section,
North Lumberton. Got to complaining about, "We want a pool." My idea was
to build us a city pool. All right, now where they going to put it? They
put in a bond issue to put a pool over here in Parkview. We didn't solve
nothing with that. I said, "No, they're fixing to build a mud hole over
here." I said, "No, we're just going to build one. Build it
centralized." I was even fighting my wife's club because they were
following that black leader at that time. I was cussing her out too. I
said, "Give them money to do that. That's segregating again." But that
fell through. We didn't build no pool now, and we don't have a city pool
today. I tell you. I know all this stuff.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Do you ever think twice about that? Do you ever say, "Well, maybe some
pool's better than no pool?" Do you ever say that to yourself?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Oh, no. I don't even think about it now. When I said don't think about
it, people, blacks they're where they can go somewhere and swim, and
things, and so forth. But what I could see, hey, were going to do the
same thing. Remember what I told you they did about the schools? Big
high school over there, a black high school over here, and a white. They
were going to put a city little old pool over here and build a fine pool
up there. Now, I'm going to not build one. So we didn't build none. It's
obvious why we didn't build none. I know if they built it somewhere it
would have been lots of people worked it, but just made some not well
kept. I know that. If I don't know it I feel it so strongly I still know
that. But [unclear] as long as their children have to get in it, you know I know
that.

Page 24

MALINDA MAYNOR:

I there anything, you've said so many positive things about the results
of integration, and I wonder if there's anything you would look back and
say was better under segregation that it is under integration?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

I guess I got a little bias in me. Now, I've heard so many issues on
what's better, but I never agreed with nothing I've heard.

They tried to make an issue out of hauling children. Well, it would be
better for children not to have to ride so far, but let me tell you
something. When they were segregated they was riding for to keep
segregated. They wouldn't go to the black school. They had to bus them
all the way to the white school. I hear about six, seven, eight miles
out here from where I live, and they were busing children up to
Lumberton High School right there in front of my door. So that busing
issue weren't nothing.

Talk about busing. That's what you've always done, bus to keep from
integrating. Now they made you bus to integrate, and you want to fight
it. It's just that true. You have to understand things like that.

Again, I just can't think of nothing. I can't, and I've heard so many
things, but I don't know one thing I'll agree with. People right now,
you can ask some blacks. They'll give you a reason why we should still
be segregated, but to me I haven't got enough something in me to
understand how in the world you say that because the good so much
surpasses the bad until if there's anything bad, the good will cover it
up. It's just been a blessing to me.

My son, do you think my son could have been public defender? Good
gracious alive. He was the first black to join the Robeson County Bar.

Page 25

The same lawyer I was telling you about, the
school board lawyer came to me after he joined the bar here, my son,
said, "Angus, we're going to make your son chaplain of the bar." They
did. Said, "Yep, keep people quiet." He came and said that to me. I knew
when he said it, "Man, you don't know what a fight you've got on your
hands." They made him chaplain, but he's also now been president of the
Robeson County Bar. All that's due to integration. I don't know anything
that's bad about it. This stuff would not have happened.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

What did you think about school merger then that happened in the 80s?
What was your impression of that movement.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

At the outset I was for it. I was for it. Now, I'll tell you who was
against it. [unclear] It was being said, and I guess there was a little truth in it at
that time, the county schools wasn't as well qualified as the city
schools, and I'm quite sure that they couldn't help for what Lumberton
was offering and all that stuff. So we didn't have any real fight about
mergers because the mass of the people were county, and the county
people, they knew. I just told you. They were fighting to get their
children in the city schools. That's why.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Because they wanted to improve their—.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

They had more to offer in the city schools, more to offer than the
county schools. That's why I wanted my boy in it. So, I was a hundred
per cent for it even though I didn't have anybody in the county at the
time. But my gracious, I had all my black people out there. It's just a
matter of unselfishness. That would make the schools become more on a
level.

Page 26

You take right now. Wake county, I'd say
even Guilford, Mecklenberg, those counties they have more finance per
pupil that we—I won't say we'll ever have—they have too much more to
spend for children than we do down here because it's low income. Well,
it was the same thing with the city and the county. The city schools was
so much more equipped than the county schools. That's one reason for the
merge. They asked for the merge.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Do you think it's been successful?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yes. Yes, ma'am. I really do. You can find somebody to give you a reason
that they haven't, but I'll give you a whole lot that they have. Yes. It
has upgraded a lot of your county schools. When you get them all in the
same pot, if you're in that pot over there, and I'm in this pot, I don't
know what you're doing over there, and you don't know what I'm doing.
You know what's going on, and they fight for part [unclear].

MALINDA MAYNOR:

There's one more question I had specifically, and then I wanted to see
if there was anything else you wanted to say or anything else you felt
like was important. But I was wondering during this whole time if you
had ever felt like your work situation, you employment, was threatened
in some way because of your political activity, or not threatened? Did
you have experiences where people of different races that were actively
supporting what you were doing and helping you? You had mentioned how
somebody would come to you and say, "Well, Mrs. Thompson needs a job,
and she teaches school, and don't you want to go along with this, that,
and the other thing?" Talk about that a little bit if it's relevant.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

At that particular time—first, let me say this. I wasn't what you call
selected leadership. I wasn't that. I wasn't selected leadership. If you
wasn't, you were

Page 27

left out. You suffer. Just like I
told you, they'd fight you just like a dog. I've had them try to put the
foot on my head, but I haven't been hungry yet. If you don't follow,
this was the attitude. We've got a lot of that right now. If you don't
follow we're going to press you to the ground. Now, that was the
attitude. That's why they said, "Come on. You know your wife's got to
have a job. You this and that. If you don't, we're going to put you out
of business." They have tried that.

Let me tell you what. Listen, they were against my fight so much. They
fought me because of my daddy. They fought my son because of me. Listen,
here he is out of law school, comes to the city council, same black city
councilman, to get some practice, office practice and stuff like that in
the city. He's got his law degree now, and the city councilman tells my
son, "Well, got nothing now but on a garbage truck." Now he's got a law
degree.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

And offered him a job on a garbage truck?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

On the garbage truck. Well, now, he's got a law degree. That made him
hot. At that particular time, he said, "I'll tell you what you do. If
you pass the bar you come back and talk with me again." And it wasn't a
week before he got his notice from the bar. He had passed it. I don't
know whether he went back and showed it to him or not. If he did, and
this wasn't the right attitude, but if he did, he told him what he could
kiss. [Laughter.]

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

So he jumps up and is going to run against him. Well, I advised him.
He's young. I said, "Don't do that. Don't run against him for city
councilman." I said, "You just go ahead. Get yourself good in your work
and everything, your law practice, and

Page 28

wait until
later." He wasn't telling me why he wanted to run against him, but I
knew. He said, "I'm going to run." I said, "Well, if you're going to
run, I'm going to help you." So he got out there and run. I was going to
his campaign meetings, debates and things. I felt sorry for him at the
time. His old head was calling him anything he—. But that was good for
him. That's made him strong. It made him better. I always considered my
daddy [unclear]. I don't care what you got.

Unselected leadership, they was trying to press you to the ground. But I
came up on my grand daddy's farm. I never had to really work, stoop for
these white folks. It was in my Daddy, it was just in the blood. I never
did much bending.v I'll never forget one day. My mamma got scared for me
because I kind put— I was in my teens. I heard somebody coming through
the house, and he was a white man. He done come in the front door,
coming down the hall. Nobody asked him. And I got up and was going to
put him out. I don't know why. If I came to your house I came to the
back door. My grand daddy used to send me to white folks to borrow some
bread— and I had to go to the back door. And them dogs— They'd look out
the window, "Don't hit him. He ain't no [unclear]. Don't hit him."

MALINDA MAYNOR:

Man.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

All that stuff. That's what I said. Here's this man, walk down through
this house just like it's yours. But my mamma told me. I did get a bit
scary. She told me, "She said son, don't talk to these white folks like
that. Bless their souls." She was right. "You'll find yourself hanging
up in a tree out there." God has just been good all the time.

You take even my daddy. She was teaching down in Fairmont. Now listen to
this. My mamma was teaching down in Fairmont. Littlefield was
superintendent down

Page 29

there. He fired—he released
her—I'll say fired my mamma or released her unjustly, and daddy sued the
school board, and they had to pay her for the time that she was out of
work and then hire her. He was a fighter.

Now, after he did that I'll never forget one night. There was two black
men came to our house and they was wanting to know the way to Bertha
Singletary's. Bertha Singletary's. It was kind of late at night. My
daddy had his shoes off and everything. He went to the door and he met
them and told them how to get there. All they had to do was go straight
down the road, but for some reason they couldn't understand. And he came
back to where we were to get his shoes. My mamma said, "V.J., what do
you think your doing?" He was known as V.J. He said, "I'm going to show
them. They're trying to go to Bertha Singletary's. I'm going to show
them." My mamma said, "V.J. you'd better watch what you're doing out
there. You know you just sued that school board down there." My daddy
went back there to those country people and said, "I don't"—. It wasn't
fifteen minutes, oh Lord. A black man came in. He came to us and said,
"The Klu Klux Klan's out for somebody." That was the intersection. So
they stayed down there at Buster Sanchez. I said, "The Lord have mercy.
The Lord good." They'd been there to get my daddy. The Lord has been
good.

I never will forget when he came, Mac Legerton. Lord knows if they
weren't after him. I'd get so scared for that poor man. I said, "Lord
have mercy." I used to be with him a lot and do what I could. When you
go against with the system you can expect retaliation. Now you can
believe that. When you go against the system, the leadership, and all
that stuff you can expect retaliation. But it's all been good. White
folks have come and asked me, the mayor right now. He doesn't even
realize. He comes to me, me

Page 30

and my wife all the
time to support him when he's running for mayor. I'm not even in the
city. [Laughter.]

MALINDA MAYNOR:

But you have influence, right?

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

Yeah.

MALINDA MAYNOR:

That's why he wants your support because you can influence the people
that would vote for him.

ANGUS BOAZ THOMPSON SR.:

That house over there is in the city, and this one is in the city, but
I'm not. Now, why am I not in the city? Because of all this stuff I've
been telling you. They didn't want to deal with me because they knew I'd
fight. They didn't want to deal with me.

And really what happened, after we got the school district lines drawn
and all that stuff, our city councilman went to Raleigh. He didn't have
to go to Raleigh. Sam Noble he took Hector McLean's place as senator in
Raleigh. Now Sam Noble, me and Sam were close, but he was against a lot
of things this black councilman did, and he knew I was against it. Sam
would help me out here. He got the state to drain and all that stuff,
but after Hector left Sam Noble was appointed as state senator to full
out his term. This black councilman went up there and got him to draw up
legislation to change the method of incorporating city limits, and that
was because of me.